Alaska News

The Importance of the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve IBA to Migratory Birds

One small study area in Southeast Alaska shocked the 探花精选 Science Division: The Chilkat Valley is a major migration passage for many Alaska birds.
Chilkat Valley in Alaska

Not many places on the planet look like Jilk谩at Aani, or the Chilkat Valley. There are dramatic mountains, common in Southeast Alaska, the distinguished silty teal color of the waters, postcard communities, and life everywhere.

鈥淲e do have the jagged mountains, the Chilkat Range,鈥 says Lani Strong Hotch, an award-winning textile artist and Chilkat Indian Village-proclaimed culture bearer. 鈥淚 look out my window and I can see where part of the Tsirku enters into the Chilkat.鈥

The Chilkat Valley hosts the community of Deish煤 (Haines) and the (the Tribal government) of Klukwan, where Hotch is from, located at the confluence of the Tsirku, Klehini, and Chilkat rivers. And for a look at that 鈥淐hilkat blue,鈥 Hotch says the geological story of the Tsirku is told through her Tsirku River Robe, a work she created using Chilkat and Ravenstail technique as the owner of .

Within the Chilkat Valley sits the 49,000-acre (IBA). It鈥檚 home to the world鈥檚 largest congregation of Bald Eagles, the annual , and the . However, the Chilkat Watershed faces the threat of a proposed mine that has been steadily gaining ground.

While the region is known for its biodiversity, the 探花精选 Science Division was recently able to put real numbers to anecdotal observation. They focused on migratory bird activity in the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve IBA, resulting in the aptly named report. In short, the Chilkat Valley is a major migration passage for many Alaska birds鈥攑articularly in fall and especially in spring.

On the Report

So, there wasn鈥檛 a ton of confidence going into this.

鈥淚t was the smallest area that we had run this analysis for,鈥 says Bill DeLuca, Senior Manager of Migration Ecology at 探花精选. 鈥淚 was a little worried.鈥

DeLuca is referring to the Migration Passage Analysis鈥攁 way to quantify just how important a site is for migratory birds. It uses 鈥2022 eBird Status weekly estimates of abundance in conjunction with Partners In Flight population estimates to estimate the cumulative number of individuals and the percent of the total North American population passing through the study region during a migration season for each species included in the study,鈥 or so the report reads. If you鈥檙e curious about the methodologies used to generate the Chilkat report, check out report.

In summer 2023, the Migration Passage Analysis was applied to the petite Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve IBA, an area of approximately 18,100 hectares. For comparison, one of the first study areas, the Colorado River Delta, is 930,000 hectares.

All DeLuca was hoping to find in a borrowed pickup truck was 鈥渃ongregations of 鈮1% of the global population of one or more species on a regular or predictable basis.鈥 That means he was hoping the site would demonstrate greater than or equal to 1% of the total North American population of any bird species. That would prove the site to be of global significance. Yes, 1% sounds extremely low, but it鈥檚 actually pretty significant.

And how many species did they find hitting or surpassing 1%? 18. Not just one or two, but 18!

During spring migration, those species are Surf Scoter (18%), Glaucous-winged Gull (2%), Barrow鈥檚 Goldeneye (2%), Western Sandpiper (2%), and Bonaparte鈥檚 Gull (2%). Species that hit the 1% mark are Trumpeter Swan, Rock Sandpiper, White-winged Scoter, Varied Thrush, American Pipit, and of course Bald Eagle.

During fall migration, the study area sees Surf Scoter (9%), Glaucous-winged Gull (6%), Sharp-shinned Hawk (3%), and Bald Eagle (2%). Species hitting the 1% mark are Trumpeter Swan, Bonaparte鈥檚 Gull, Horned Grebe, Northern Goshawk, Dunlin, Golden Eagle, Harlequin Duck, and American Wigeon.

鈥淚 was more than half expecting not to find anything to cross that 1% threshold,鈥 DeLuca says. 鈥淭he fact that we had as many as we did cross that 1% threshold, that alone surprised me.鈥

And DeLuca says these estimates are probably on the lower end. There could well be more.

This news is welcome but probably not surprising to Stacie Evans, Science Director at (TWC) and board president at , who鈥檚 lived in Haines since 2012. Before TWC, she studied seabirds in some of Alaska鈥檚 most remote places for six years with the .

鈥淭he mouth of the Chilkat River provides crucial habitat for birds migrating to northern interior regions via the Shakwak Trench. Here there is a rich and expansive estuary where birds are able to take advantage of the last available marine resources, such as invertebrates and fish, before the long and arduous journey to their breeding grounds,鈥 Evans says. 鈥淲ithout this final boost in calories, it is conceivable that this migratory route would not be viable.鈥

On Specific Species

Let鈥檚 start with the obvious winner of the Migration Passage Analysis, the Surf Scoter. To reiterate, the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve IBA sees 18% of the total North American population of Surf Scoter during spring migration and 9% in fall.

These ducks鈥攖he males black with a striking pattern of white head patches鈥攎igrate in flocks and are well known for the 鈥渞afts鈥 that hundreds to thousands of Scoters (including White-winged Scoter, which hits the 1% threshold in the Chilkat region in spring) create on the water鈥檚 surface.

Hotch can confirm. 鈥淥h yeah, you can get huge rafts of Scoters around here,鈥 she says.

Evans agrees. 鈥淲hile learning that up to 18% of the North American population of Surf Scoters occurs here in the spring is not really surprising to me (I鈥檝e witnessed the massive rafts), I am very excited that we now have the numbers to reinforce our anecdotal observations,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his means that we can better advocate for the protection of habitats that support these populations.鈥 (Protections from what? More on that later.)

But DeLuca was pretty surprised to see that high of a number for Surf Scoters.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not like it鈥檚 18% of a population that鈥檚 just really confined to Alaska; this is a continentally distributed species,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are a couple [of species] that always stick out, and that was definitely one that stuck out for us.鈥 (DeLuca says the population percentage of Sharp-shinned Hawk, 3% during fall migration, also surprised him.)

Other impressive numbers come from shorebirds like Dunlin and Western Sandpiper鈥攔usty-colored little peeps that migrate in a series of short to moderate flights.

鈥淥ne figure that is somewhat surprising to me, however, is that up to 2% of Western Sandpipers occur in the study area,鈥 says Evans. 鈥淲estern Sandpipers are a particularly vulnerable species because the vast majority stopover in [the Copper River Delta] during spring migration. If something were to happen there to make it unsuitable habitat for sandpipers, places like the Chilkat River estuary could become the last lifeline for the species.鈥

Then there鈥檚 the Horned Grebe, a small duck-like diver species that in its summer plumage has buffy-gold 鈥渉orns鈥 on its black head. Again, DeLuca clocked it at 1% during fall migration. And 探花精选 considers its conservation status as 鈥渧ulnerable.鈥 It鈥檚 thought to have declined in recent decades, although solid data is mostly lacking. (For interactive maps depicting the Horned Grebe鈥檚 migration and conservation threats, see 探花精选鈥檚 tool.)

鈥淥ur job was to show for which species is that site important, and the Horned Grebe definitely shows up there,鈥 DeLuca says. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e saying that 2% of their whole population is going through Haines 鈥 that kind of means a big proportion of the ones that are breeding in Alaska are probably going through the Chilkat.鈥

On the Study Area

The Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve IBA stretches along the Jilkaat Heeni, or Chilkat River, which means 鈥淪torage Container for Salmon鈥 in Tlingit. It sits about 19 miles north on Haines Highway from Haines, 18 miles south of the Canadian border, and surrounds the Chilkat Indian Village of Klukwan鈥攖aken from the Tlingit phrase 鈥淭lakw Aan鈥 which means 鈥淓ternal Village,鈥 or 鈥淭he Village That Has Always Been.鈥 The village is one of the longest continuously inhabited communities in North America.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 know exactly how long our people have been here, but I understand that there are some fish trap remains on the other side of the mountain that鈥檚 behind Klukwan on the Chilkoot River that was carbon dated to 2,000 years ago,鈥 Hotch says. 鈥淎nd that shows the longevity of our people in this area.鈥

Hotch explains there are two moieties in Klukwan, the Raven and Eagle, which must be kept balanced. 鈥淚n my household, my husband is the Raven. He鈥檚 the former clan leader for the Gaanaxteidi and I am Eagle from the Wolf House. So we have that balance in our home,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut now we鈥檙e matrilineal so all of our children are Kaagwaantaan鈥擡agle Wolf.鈥

Hotch says she and her husband, Chilkat Indian Village Vice President Jones P. Hotch, Jr., are 鈥渟urrounded by Eagles here,鈥 and that, 鈥淭he Council Grounds are right around Klukwan.鈥

Council Grounds is another name for part of the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve, which was created in 1982 by the State of Alaska to protect Bald Eagles, salmon, and their essential habitats 鈥渋n perpetuity.鈥 And 探花精选 played a prominent role in its formation.

In fact, one of 探花精选 Alaska鈥檚 first actions as a then-regional office for Hawaii and Alaska was to . According to a 1984 coffee table book from  titled 鈥淭he Chilkat River Valley,鈥 探花精选 in 1979 鈥渋nitiated a four-year study in conjunction with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to learn how the eagle could be protected while other resources were developed. 探花精选 sent Erv Boeker, a retired Fish and Wildlife biologist, to Haines to head the research.鈥 That summer, former governor Jay Hammond signed into law a bill establishing the preserve. The Haines State Forest and the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve Advisory Council were also established.

The area was recognized as a state-priority level IBA, one of nearly 200 in Alaska, in 2008 based on the large number of Bald Eagles in the fall and nesting Trumpeter Swans in the summer. The , plus  and , are stops along the . And if you visit, the  is a great place to start.

But why do Bald Eagles, up to 4,000, gather here each fall?

鈥淎t the confluence of the Chilkat and Tsirku rivers warm groundwater discharges upward into the Chilkat River at about 40掳 F, protecting sections of the river from freezup,鈥 reads 鈥淭he Chilkat River Valley,鈥 from Alaska Geographic. 鈥淥pen water supports the later salmon run, which in turn provides plentiful meals for eagles during an otherwise lean time of year.鈥

So the area is known for Bald Eagles and, as we鈥檝e proven, tons of other birds, but that鈥檚 just a fraction of what occurs here.

鈥淭he Chilkat Valley is one of the most biodiverse places in Alaska,鈥 Hotch says. 鈥淲e live amongst all these birds and animals and they鈥檙e part of our daily life. We respect them and appreciate them, and they add to our life experience and quality of life.鈥

If you really want to dig, check out the , an 探花精选 Alaska publication from 2016. But to zoom in on the Chilkat region, there鈥檚 saak (or eulachon, a type of smelt), trout, char, and all five species of Pacific salmon. There are black and brown bears and the most genetically diverse mountain goat population in North America. Then add moose, wolves, lynx, orcas, sea lions, on and on. Plus tons of flora鈥攍ike the rare mountain lady鈥檚 slipper鈥攊n addition to all that fauna. There鈥檚 also hemlock, spruce, paper birch, and giant black cottonwood trees as well as multitudes of berries.

鈥淲e often talk about biodiversity in the Chilkat Valley, and for good reason,鈥 Evans says. 鈥淭he valley hosts the most mammal species in Alaska (we鈥檙e up to 39 after a fisher was trapped here last winter), the most bird species detected in Alaska during the annual United States Geological Survey Breeding Bird Survey, and the most vascular plant species found in Alaska.鈥

And right now in spring, this is all very apparent. Especially with this year鈥檚 eulachon run.

鈥淚t feels very timely to comment on avian communities in the Chilkat Valley right now. With indeterminable numbers of gulls (I鈥檝e been marking more than 100,000 on my datasheet, but I鈥檓 certain it is far more than that), thousands of ducks, and hundreds of eagles, all gorging themselves on eulachon and their eggs, it鈥檚 impossible not to be impressed by the biomass generated by this phenomenon,鈥 Evans says. 鈥淭here are fish everywhere right now, and not just along the river. Birds鈥攔avens in particular鈥攁re constantly dropping eulachon in the forest, demonstrating their role as natural fertilizers.鈥

On Threats Against (and Wins for) the Chilkat

Looking at the report, at the data showcasing significant populations for multiple bird species, Deluca says, 鈥淚鈥檇 be really worried about doing anything that affects the watershed there.鈥

He鈥檚 not alone.

Upon its 1982 establishment, the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve was to be closed 鈥渢o mineral entry, commercial timber harvest, and sale of land under the state land disposal program,鈥 reads 鈥淭he Chilkat River Valley.鈥 However, there isn鈥檛 protection for the entirety of the Chilkat and its watershed.

For years, the threat to Chilkat water quality was logging. 鈥淗aines does not see as much logging as it used to,鈥 says Evans. 鈥淏ut logging affects the temperature of the water, which affects the salmon, and everything around here depends on salmon.鈥

But the threat now is the proposed Palmer Mine.

The currently known Palmer Project is a proposed mixed metals mine that would be set at the headwaters of the Chilkat Watershed. The ore body is located beneath land managed by the and the (BLM). The two mining operations are , a subsidiary of the Canadian company , and , a Japanese smelter company. There has been drilling, blasting, seismic testing, and infrastructure development. The end goal is a mining district for zinc, copper, silver, gold, and barite above the Klehini River, a major tributary of the Chilkat River (and both were named among ).

All this has led some conservationists in the Chilkat Valley to call Palmer the new Pebble Mine. And why?

Shannon Donahue鈥擡xecutive Director of who also runs Arcturus Conservation Consulting鈥攃an break it down. She鈥檚 been combatting the project for years. But in short, it is incredibly risky to develop on the ore part of a volcanogenic mass sulfide deposit because of its acid-generating rock.

鈥淲hen exposed to air and water, this rock undergoes a chemical reaction producing a substance similar to battery acid that usually leaches into nearby waters,鈥 Donahue explains. 鈥淭his Acid Rock Drainage (ARD) typically requires active water treatment for perpetuity, often for centuries鈥攍ong after mining companies have come and gone.鈥

Donahue says ARD and heavy metals associated with mining have toxic effects on wildlife and people. ARD acidifies streams and groundwater and dissolves rock to release additional metals into water. What鈥檚 more, copper can interfere with the ability of salmon to locate home spawning streams and selenium can cause spinal deformities in fish. This is no good, as 鈥渢he ecology, economy, and cultures of the Chilkat Watershed revolve around healthy salmon runs.鈥

Hotch can speak to that culture part.

鈥淚n Klukwan, we eat that salmon in the river and have for countless generations. That鈥檚 what brought our people here to begin with,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just our livelihood, but our whole cultural way of living is at stake here. Not just what we put in our mouths, but our way of life here.鈥

Of course, a major push for the Palmer Mine has to do with the supposed economic benefits the operation could bring. But Hotch, and many others, say that would be short-lived. Donahue shares that an  found the mine鈥檚 preliminary economic assessment (PEA) overestimates mineral prices and underestimates the project鈥檚 costs, making the Palmer Project highly speculative, with a high level of risk. Plus Constantine-American Pacific Mining has stated the life of the proposed mine to be just 10 to 15 years.

鈥淲e try to wake people up to the fact that this river is a treasure, with untold treasures,鈥 Hotch says, 鈥渁nd we shouldn鈥檛 risk it for a quick shot in the arm economically.鈥

If you鈥檙e curious about the legality of all this, it鈥檚 on the level. Mining in the U.S. is governed by the (which sounds dated because it is). 鈥淎nd, the Palmer Project is still operating under an outdated surface exploration plan approved by the BLM that fails to account for impacts of underground exploration,鈥 Donahue explains. 鈥淪tate regulations are also weak. The state has permitted the project to discharge wastewater into groundwater where it will likely end up in the Klehini and Chilkat rivers, ignoring the need for a Clean Water Act permit for discharge to surface waters.鈥

Then there鈥檚 the tunnel.

Constantine-American Pacific Mining plans to dig a 1.25-mile tunnel at the headwaters of Glacier Creek beneath Saksaia Glacier for exploration鈥攚hich, though exploratory, can still have irreversible impacts. 鈥淭his is a point-of-no-return,鈥 Donahue says, 鈥渂ecause once the tunnel hits acid-generating rock, the tunnel is likely to leach ARD and heavy metals into the surrounding environment颅鈥攁 process that is extremely difficult if not impossible to stop.鈥

And there are new developments all the time. Here鈥檚 a quick look at just some of the action of the past year:

  • In spring 2023, Constantine-American Pacific Mining鈥檚 application to mine at the Chilkat Watershed headwaters in the Glacier Creek Valley failed to provide adequate information about baseline conditions and potential impacts on birds, fish, other wildlife, and water quality (there was a short comment periodfor this, in about a week).
  • Last fall, on behalf of Lynn Canal Conservation, Rivers Without Borders, and the Southeast Alaska Conservation Council for more protective standards for wastewater discharge from mineral exploration conducted by Constantine-American Pacific Mining.
  • This winter, Gov. Mike Dunleavy issued Executive Order No. 132 to eliminate the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve Advisory Council鈥攖he aforementioned committee that applies local and Indigenous knowledge toward managing the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve IBA. Its duties would have been taken over by the Alaska Department of Natural Resources (DNR) but the in March.
  • And just this spring, Constantine-American Pacific Mining released a 336-page document outlining the Palmer Project鈥檚 five-year Plan of Operations (literally PoO). DNR allotted just two weeks for public review and input despite official calls to extend this comment period (which didn鈥檛 happen).

Groups dedicated to combatting the proposed Palmer Mine have made headway, though. Chilkat Indian Village has been challenging permits and approvals for the Palmer Project since 2017. For many groups, a big win came in 2019 when Constantine-American Pacific Mining applied for a State of Alaska Waste Management Permit to discharge wastewater into the ground near the headwaters of Glacier Creek and the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation  in response to requests from Tribes and conservation organizations.

There have been little victories and setbacks over the years, but last fall, the people of Jilk谩at Aani turned out in person for what turned out to be an eventful week.

On October 2, 2023, more than 150 Klukwan and Haines residents . Then on October 5, another 100-plus community members and visitors came together at a bridge at the 26-mile mark of Haines Highway for a , again to voice their opposition to the proposed Palmer Mine.

鈥淚t was very gratifying to see the number of people who turned out to our water blessing ceremony鈥攁nd it was pouring rain that day!鈥 Hotch says. 鈥淢y regalia was all soaking wet. I had to spread it out in my big room and let it air dry for a couple of days.鈥

At the ceremony, Hotch says the crowd prayed, shared Klukwan founding stories, sang and played music, and, among other activities, wrote words of gratitude and blessings on pieces of driftwood and dropped them in the water. 鈥淏ecause words have power,鈥 Hotch says. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want to wait until they鈥檙e actually hauling ore out on trucks to make our voice be heard. We don鈥檛 want to wait till it鈥檚 too late.鈥

While the Palmer Mine would have a future impact on the Chilkat, it鈥檚 clearly taking a toll on its residents now. 鈥淲e live with a certain amount of angst here because of that,鈥 Hotch says. She says her husband Jones, who鈥檚 over 70, should be enjoying retirement instead of leading efforts on behalf of the Chilkat Indian Village to fight the Palmer Mine, but there鈥檚 too much at stake.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 want our life way of life to go down on our watch while we have life and breath in us,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e got to do what we can, we have a responsibility to future generations. So that鈥檚 what keeps us working on it.鈥